Daily Kos

The Ecclesiastical Sopranos, Abortion Rights, Honesty, & Reason. An Open Letter to Catholic Clergy.

Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 11:09:10 AM PDT

This letter grew out of my frustration, generally, as a supporter and provider of legal, professional abortion care, in countering the massive body of fraudulent claims about abortion care in wide popular circulation through the efforts of anti-abortion propagandists. It stems from my repulsion at the sorry spectacle of misinformed and prejudiced laypersons in Congress and in state legislatures and running for office endeavoring to micromanage a specialized field of medical practice about which they obviously know and understand little, neither of its medical nor of its sociological dimensions, and to force their narrow religious views upon everyone under the cynical lie of "protecting women." The morality of bearing true witness is of paramount importance to me. The essay that accompanies this letter, Abortion Rights 101, is a distillation of facts (and some well-founded opinion) concerning the most basic foundations of understanding the abortion controversy, thus its title. There is much more to it from all angles, but this "course 101" seems to me to be a good starting place. As a colleague of mine once said, "Everyone in America over the age of eleven has a great deal of information about abortion, and almost all of it is wrong."

My professional service to my patients is just as sincere as that of any other caring and ethical physician, and I take great satisfaction from providing the best care that I can to them in a non-judgmental setting. I deeply believe that I am benefiting humanity and that the Judeo-Christian God would be pleased with my work. There is an abundance of truthful fact and valid scientific evidence and analysis to support this belief. There is absolutely nothing in the Bible to contradict it.  

I recently received a brusque reply to statements I have made from a prominent Roman Catholic "Pro-Lifer," a priest, with whom I have conducted an on-again-off-again correspondence for several years. Within that reply was the following:

"And as you keep ripping the babies apart, I'll keep coming to OSA
events . . . Yours are the same explanations I talk about all the
time to those who wonder how doctors can kill babies when they know it's a
baby as well as we do.

"And, of course, you think it's all about ‘belief.’ It's always that way for those who justify killing others, isn't it?"

I replied:

"What a childish, simplistic view! And from one (you) who celebrates the murderous regime of George W. Bush! How you can reconcile that is beyond me. It must take a ton of denial!

"That phrase, ‘ripping the babies apart,’ seems to be the only arrow in your quiver - like a mantra repeated over and over until it assumes a hypnotic power over you. Like a Goebbelsinesque lie that is repeated over and over until it is at last believed.

"It's just a crying shame that you won't channel all this boundless, zealous energy of yours into a constructive, positive direction instead of striving to force the dictates of your narrow, uncompromising religious cult, large in size though it is, onto women and teenage girls, our mothers, daughters, sisters, wives, and their families and friends. It is just so chillingly tragic that I am moved to wonder whether you have a heart at all. Your efforts really reflect, more than anything, heartless, punitive cruelty seeking acceptability by masquerading as phony and misguided ‘compassion’ for insentient embryonic organizations of cells that are not ‘babies’ no matter how often or how stridently you call them that.

"As a psychiatrist before training in ObGyn one thing I did for several years was the required psychiatric assessments of candidates for the priesthood for a Protestant Episcopal bishop. It has long been my observation that making so constricting a choice so early in life, as have most of those who become priests, in many cases arrests intellectual, emotional, and psychological development at an immature stage when all is viewed in rigid, simplistic black or white dichotomies like the ‘good guys’ vs. the ‘bad guys.’ You seem to fall right into this mold.

"We grownups know that there are very many very ‘bad’ cowboys and very many very ‘good’ Indians. Shades of grey. Context. Nuance. Truth. You don't seem to have advanced near that far.

"Try this honest and poignant  story - just one of multitudes of similar stories I see daily that could be told. Is your heart really so utterly hardened and your understanding so constricted that you cannot empathize with this courageous human being's story and millions upon millions similar to it?

"Of course, your self-imposed ignorance persists as in pristine cowardice you continue to acknowledge only anything, however unlikely or demonstrably only imaginary, that confirms what you so fiercely want to believe and to seal your mind off from any unequivocal factual reality that however slightly runs counter to your nothing-but-belief - which is exactly what I have described to you as the result of prematurely closing your mind at an age of childish, simplistic false-certainty so that only your point of view is valid to you and must be imposed upon everybody in the world - of course, of course, of course nothing-but-belief! What else could it possibly be? Either that or you are a psychopathic liar and manipulator of epic stature who, aware of your own dishonesty and contempt, and not believing it yourself, commits your pitiless atrocities knowing full well how much misery, suffering, and death you encourage through your single-minded and extreme opposition to human freedom - caring only about your own ego, pleasing your ecclesiastical ‘bosses’ to advance your vainglorious career, and the superstitious ambition of winning a ticket to 'heaven' by doing what you believe, completely without evidence to establish it as anything but belief, is the bidding of a monstrously unbending and punitive tyrant in the sky somewhere. Does your eternal ‘paradise,’ as does another version we've heard a lot about in recent years, come with a promise of 72 virgins lusting after you once you get there? (If so, I wouldn't expect their virginity to last long when confronted with all the dammed up, raw sexual energy that must accompany a middle-aged man who has practiced the quaint perversion of celibacy all his life.)

"In this I urge you to see the underlying psychology of such seemingly diverse phenomena as the crucifixion of Christ (basically for defying dogmatic orthodoxy by teaching the ancient ‘sins’ of freedom, equality, acceptance, kindness, peace, and love), the Crusades, the Holy Inquisition, the genocide sanctioned and blessed by your ecclesiastical forebears of the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean islands and of Central and South America, the attacks on this country by religious zealots on 9/11, and the justifications given for the Bush/Cheney invasion of Iraq. Sometimes the more things change the more they stay the same. I refer you again to my article on DKos:

"The Inquisition lives. Ask a woman with an unwanted pregnancy.  
                       
"But I understand the pickle you're in. Even if you ever were to somehow summon up the courage and integrity to face the fact of the living complex of unfounded beliefs, lies, and callousness you are. Tolstoy said it well:

I know that most men...can seldom accept even the simplest and most obvious truth if it be such as would oblige them to admit the falsity of conclusions which they have delighted in explaining to colleagues, which they have proudly taught to others, and which they have woven, thread by thread, into the fabrics of their lives.

"I guess you would be left to flap and twist in the breeze. What would you do? How would you survive? Heavy stuff! I sincerely empathize!

"But remember my motto:

No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

"Like, e.g., that weird belief that keeps cropping up about a zygote being a ‘baby’ that has ‘God-given’ status and rights that supercede the status and rights of pregnant women and teenage girls, or that unfounded belief (or deliberate lie?) that safe, legal, professional abortion care ‘hurts women,’ or that favorite belief of yours that it is appropriate or right that you strive to impose your religious mythology on the whole world by zealously striving to impose rigidly coercive and punitive law and by threat of violence and inciting others to violence -  you know, like ‘Fr.’ Osama bin Laden and his Holy Inquisition - excuse me, I meant 'Priests for Life' - no, that's still not it - oh, yes: al-Qaeda - that's it. I guess poor old ‘Fr.’ Osama, too, was influenced to shut down his ‘God-given’ mind at an early, immature (i.e., childish and simplistic) stage. After all, that's the problem with all religionists. No?

Yes.

"You must know that a human mind, unless stifled by fear and shame, continues to grow and develop long after the period of prenatal gestation. Indeed, what I am writing about is the abortion of the life process of intellectual, psychological, and emotional development so essential to the full flowering of the human potential, which is the kind of abortion you are trained to provide.

"And don't forget the run-on sentence I sent you a couple of emails ago:

"

About 70,000 thinking, feeling, often desperate women and teenage girls die every year from illegal attempts to abort unwanted pregnancies, which is more than one every 10 minutes dead because they are prohibited by law from accessing safe, legal, professional abortion care, and many times that number are seriously injured and maimed for life, not to mention that in addition, every minute, night and day, no holidays or weekends off, around the world one woman dies of complications of pregnancy and childbirth (every minute), ten teenage girls undergo unsafe illegal abortions (every minute), thirteen infants under twelve months old die (every minute), fifty seven people contract an STD (every minute), eleven people are infected with HIV (every minute), and the already-burgeoned-beyond-the-planet's-capacity-to-sustain human population increases by one hundred fifty more people (every minute), all sanctioned, encouraged, and even enforced by our callous right-wing-dominated government through international interference with and withholding of funding from worldwide reproductive health and sex education programs, all with the vigorous support and reinforcement of the Roman Catholic Church.

"And that is what you are doing, based upon your belief - and we aren't talking about insentient embryos, but mothers, daughters, wives, sisters, lovers, friends, all thinking, feeling, unequivocal persons. Your callousness and meanness makes my flesh crawl. Your ostensible superhero, Jesus, was an opposite to you and your ilk. The Roman Catholic Church resembles more than anything a crime syndicate with creeps like you the ‘wise guys’ and ‘made men’  (forgetting, denigrating, and ignoring women as always since its inception), spreading mayhem, misery, suffering, and death around the world. But your version of Cosa Nostra has royally outdone the Mafia by cloaking itself in the supernaturalism of hideously punitive religious belief against which gullible (and cradle-to-grave indoctrinated) people have no adequate defense.

"A wolf in sheep's clothing.

"Are you the tiniest bit introspective?

"My wish for you is that you will somehow reopen your mind, come to your senses, and shun your ego so that you can turn all that zealous energy of yours into something real and constructive.

"I guess I might as well take that wish and a ten dollar bill to Starbucks for a cuppa coffee?

"Pity. In the meantime people are suffering and dying all over the globe due to the efforts of you and your ilk.

"Arrivederci per ora.

"Say ‘Hi’ for me to your buddies in the Holy Cosa Nostra."

Tags: abortion, Army of God, domestic terrorism, Republicans, Religious Right, Roman Catholicism, religion, pro-choice, politics, Democrats, supreme court, reproductive rights, health, medicine, pro-life (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 27 comments

  •  Some things (8+ / 0-)

    richly deserve "bashing."

    No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

    by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 11:17:13 AM PDT

  •  Successful or not (5+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Rebecca, annrose, Beket, Lashe, choice joyce

    you deserve a rec just for attempting to reason with a correspondent as unreasonable as this one.

    I marvel that you continue to try.

    •  Well, play the Lotto, too, (4+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Rebecca, annrose, Lashe, FrankieB

      but I will admit that I'm more likely to win the Lotto than to encounter a rational priest.

      No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

      by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 11:26:10 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  There's a reason for that (4+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Rebecca, annrose, Beket, Lashe

        Only an irrational priest would be moved to send you this kind of correspondence.

        Is this the same cleric who presented the 2004 election of TGDSOBGWB "as a gift to all abortionists" from himself -- as if he were the party solely responsible for that dubious electoral event?

        •  That's the very one! He gave us TGDSOBGWB (4+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          Rebecca, annrose, Lashe, choice joyce

          all by himself!

          There's a reason for that. Only an irrational priest would be moved to send you this kind of correspondence.

          Another reason is that only an irrational person would believe what a priest believes.

          No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

          by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 11:45:01 AM PDT

          [ Parent ]

  •  Wow (6+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Rebecca, annrose, moiv, Beket, Lashe, choice joyce

    It is a shame that his mind is so colsed that it will not hear the truths that you spoke! I have long held that organized religion is no longer about religion and belief but power- power to control the lives of others. (Not to mention the monitary incentives). Fact is the hierarchy of the churches today resemble the sadduces and pharacies (sp?)of biblical times. If Jesus were to appear today they would curcify him. Thank you so much for your caring and compassionate service to those women you help day after day! You are truly a hero!

    "Veto Proof" is DC Dem for "Stay the Course." khereva

    by FrankieB on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 11:56:18 AM PDT

    •  I think organized religion has been about power (6+ / 0-)

      since its inception, and Christian organized religion since Constantine the Great in the early 4th century CE hit upon it as a device through which he could control and inspire his army and control the masses of ignorant people he ruled. Ever since then, organized Christian religion has been very popular among powerful men in the west for the same reason.

      No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

      by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:17:14 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  While my knowledge of Christian growth after (5+ / 0-)

        Constantine is spotty.  It seems to me that before Constantine it was more a matter of spreading from the bottom of society.  While after Constantine it seemed to be the rulers who were converted and then the nations were officially converted by order of the ruler.  

        Before Constantine Christianity seemed to be a vibrant religion with many branches and varieties.  After Constantine it was trimmed back harshly to the point in Europe where there was only one version allowed and any others were destroyed.  The best thing that happened to our world was the Protestant revolution.  Allowing freedom of expression to finally flourish again.  Finally bringing us to that greatest of movements that led us to all the freedoms we have today.  The Enlightenment.  

        ...that cannot be a wise contrivance which in its operation may commit the government of a nation to the wisdom of an idiot. Thomas Paine Rights of Man

        by Rebecca on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:53:31 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  Your reasoning will never make sense to him, (7+ / 0-)

    Beket, because his ideal woman is a dead woman!
    Remember that case recently in which the Pope made a saint of a woman whose doctor insisted to her that she have no more children because she would die...and then the woman went and had another child anyway...and died.
    This is his perfect woman.
    A mother in the grave with a living child.
    What can all your brilliant logic, all your compassion, do in the face of that?

    •  I agree that it is probably a (5+ / 0-)

      hopeless quest - like playing the Lotto. But, as they say, the only way to make sure you never win is not to play.

      Maybe I can at the very least warn a few others of the cruel insanity of these people by laying out why I hate them so.

      No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

      by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:22:07 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  The rape saint (7+ / 0-)

      Don't forget that poor 12 year old child who was sainted for

      her purity as model for youth.

      In 1902 an eighteen-year-old neighbor, Alexander, grabbed her from her steps and tried to rape her. When Maria said that she would rather died than submit, Alexander began stabbing her with a knife.

      As she lay in the hospital, she forgave Alexander before she died.  

      She is often mentioned on EWTN.  How sad that a hymen is more important then a girls life.  

      ...that cannot be a wise contrivance which in its operation may commit the government of a nation to the wisdom of an idiot. Thomas Paine Rights of Man

      by Rebecca on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:58:34 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Thanks for telling him like he is! (6+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Rebecca, annrose, moiv, Beket, Themistoclea, Lashe

    It takes a special kind of irreverent, devil-may-care courage to do that ;-)

    Of course, such brutal honesty is undoubtedly lost on this priest's ilk, because he's so far gone from the objective of finding truth, from the sounds of your letter. It's not just that he wouldn't recognize truth if it came up and bit him on the ass, it's more likely he's built an impenetrable bubble around himself to ensure the truth can never sink its teeth into him.

    I suppose though, Beket, it must be quite illuminating to watch such neurotic delusions at work, from the detached perspective of your psychiatric training!

    To avoid criticism, do nothing, say nothing, be nothing. Elbert Hubbard

    by choice joyce on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:23:53 PM PDT

    •  Neurotic? (5+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Rebecca, annrose, moiv, Lashe, choice joyce

      Actually, such fixed delusions identify him as psychotic - or, as I said, he really might be but a psychopathic liar who really knows how radically he misleads people and still does it deliberately for his own self-advancement and ego gratification.

      I suppose though, Beket, it must be quite illuminating to watch such neurotic delusions at work, from the detached perspective of your psychiatric training!

      More disgusting and frustrating than illuminating, although despite my long experience with severely mentally dysfunctional people it still just amazes me that individuals who seem so "normal" can be so crazy, and that they can gain such respect.

      No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

      by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:35:23 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  It is truly amazing (6+ / 0-)

    When I went to a Catholic college in the 70's I met very compassionate and flexible human respecting priests and nuns.  I was very impressed with what I saw the church doing in South America.

    Now when I look at the church I see the picture you've drawn.  While I know there are some very courageous people in both the clergy and the laity fighting against this rigid anti-human theology, they are virtually invisible against the strident, angry people controlling the church.  

    I sometimes take a look at EWTN just to see what nonsense they are pushing forward now.  One of the most ridiculous things I ever heard was about couples trying to get pregnant.  A couple who wants to get pregnant can't have the husband get a sperm sample for the doctor.  Oh no, they have to have sex with a special condom that has holes in it so their sex act is open to pregnancy.  So a couple trying to get pregnant have to go through a silly rigmarole just so they can find out why they can't get pregnant.  Pathetic.  

    In a rational world this obsession with sex and the misogyny that is it's basis would be seen for the sickness that it is.  Unfortunately, too many in this world are brought up to believe this obsession is normal and the people who are not so obsessed are the abnormal ones.  

    ...that cannot be a wise contrivance which in its operation may commit the government of a nation to the wisdom of an idiot. Thomas Paine Rights of Man

    by Rebecca on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:39:22 PM PDT

    •  Exactly! (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Rebecca, annrose

      In a rational world this obsession with sex and the misogyny that is it's basis would be seen for the sickness that it is.  Unfortunately, too many in this world are brought up to believe this obsession is normal and the people who are not so obsessed are the abnormal ones.

       

      And there is an excellent recent diary on this subject.

      No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

      by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 12:47:02 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  The rule above all (6+ / 0-)

      One of the most ridiculous things I ever heard was about couples trying to get pregnant.  A couple who wants to get pregnant can't have the husband get a sperm sample for the doctor.  Oh no, they have to have sex with a special condom that has holes in it so their sex act is open to pregnancy.

      I first read of this astonishing requirement in Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven: Women, Sexuality and the Catholic Church, an exhaustive history of the church's misogyny. The author, Professor Uta Ranke-Heinemann. was the first woman Professor of Theology at the University of Essen -- or in all of Germany, for that matter -- but that didn't last long. She was reduced to Professor of History of Religion when the German bishops objected to her incisive writing on the improbability of the virgin birth.

      She went to school with the current pope, and likes him much better than she did John Paul II.

      •  That's an interesting article (5+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        moiv, Beket, Themistoclea, Lashe, choice joyce

        Her comment about JPII

        The enormous difference between John Paul II and Ratzinger is intelligence. Ratzinger is more, much more, intelligent. Quite frankly, John Paul II was tedious without end. I couldn't stand it any more. He was obsessed with Mary.

        makes a lot of sense out of what I'd been confused about.  JPII was always portrayed as a very intelligent man after all he could speak so many languages.  But now I think about it that seems to be the only intellectual accomplishment that keeps being brought up.  

        I watched Ratzinger when he was proclaimed pope.  His face was filled with a child-like glee.  I see that same glee a bit more toned down now whenever I see him getting the applause and acclamation at those huge
        gatherings.  I've always considered him more interested in power than any ideology.  His change to the current ideology of the church was just too much like that of the politicians who shifted when the political winds shifted.  It just seemed to me he rode those winds to the top position of the church.  

        Thanks for the link.

        ...that cannot be a wise contrivance which in its operation may commit the government of a nation to the wisdom of an idiot. Thomas Paine Rights of Man

        by Rebecca on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 01:46:17 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  I agree! (3+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          Rebecca, moiv, Lashe

          I've always considered him more interested in power than any ideology.  His change to the current ideology of the church was just too much like that of the politicians who shifted when the political winds shifted.  It just seemed to me he rode those winds to the top position of the church.

           

          And that is exactly what seems to be the foremost (only?) motivation of my "pen pal" priest whom I addressed in the diary. And it seems glaringly obvious to me that the "stars" of the demented "Pro-Life Movement" are similarly motivated. They are a lot like rock stars in their own peculiar genre, and there are rumors afoot that some of the most prominent ones avail themselves of sexual benefits to an extent befitting a rock star.

          No matter how fervently you believe that you know what you merely believe, you merely believe it, and you might be wrong - very wrong.

          by Beket on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 02:13:17 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

          •  This doesn't surprise me at all (4+ / 0-)

            Recommended by:
            moiv, Beket, Lashe, choice joyce

            there are rumors afoot that some of the most prominent ones avail themselves of sexual benefits to an extent befitting a rock star.

            That after all is one of the traditional perks of getting to a certain position in power.  Using your power to get special treatment whether sex or the best parties or housing or travel or any of the other perks people have traditionally given away to get access to powerful people is something they take for granted.  What is amazing is how they get offended when people point out the hypocrisy of this.  There is an almost "how dare you?" attitude in reaction to them being caught out.  Then, of course, it's the woman or women who are blamed for the transgression and not the poor tempted beyond his power to control priest.

            ...that cannot be a wise contrivance which in its operation may commit the government of a nation to the wisdom of an idiot. Thomas Paine Rights of Man

            by Rebecca on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 03:02:53 PM PDT

            [ Parent ]

  •  Priests for Life, I presume? (8+ / 0-)

    I am a barely practicing Catholic now and this priest is part of the reason why. The fanaticism on this issue is just unbelievable. No compassion or mercy for those who in good conscience make a tough decision and than live with it thereafter. And not a whimper about punishing those who are responsible for the need for abortion. And not a word about the "Prolife" Congress and "Prolife" president and why no constitutional amendment has ever been introduced to ban abortion. They know that it will never pass with the American public.Heh Heh rich white women get knocked up too and they need safe care in nice clean clinics like in the Pre Roe days.Why the right wingnuts or not up in arms over this I don't understand. And making reliable birth control methods available so first trimester abortions for birth control failures are rare to non exsistent? Then the Church would lose one of its big talking points with the Republican party. Can't have that now.
    And this guy gets his face splashed all over the news as the "Catholic" spokesman for this issue.
    Pregnancy is a biological function and as long as pregancies occur abortions will too. No laws or preachings from a priest or other cleric will change that.
    I wish I had the link for this but the NY Times reported recently that abortions are up in Iraq because the occupation has made maternity care difficult to impossible. What a sad commentary but nary a word from our politicians about that.

    What do we want? Universal health care! When do we want it? Now!

    by cagernant on Sun Jul 08, 2007 at 01:02:08 PM PDT

    •  The original source (5+ / 0-)

      seems to be a report from the Iraqi Red Crescent, as described by ABC News.

      Pregnant Iraqi women who have been forced from their homes by worsening violence are obtaining illegal abortions because they are unable to get medical care for themselves and their unborn, according to a new report by a national humanitarian group.

      A record number of Iraqis -- most of them women and children -- are fleeing their homes to escape the bloodshed of sectarian violence and anti-U.S. attacks, according to a new report by the Iraqi Red Crescent organization, the largest aid group operating in Iraq.

      Health care is inadequate and difficult to access for those people, according to the IRC report.  

      "Pregnant women, infants and children are unable to get...required medical care," states the report, which was translated from Arabic, "and criminal abortion became [sic] the norms."

      But it's not a new development. Here's another story from the Telegraph UK, 2003

      In a makeshift clinic behind locked doors, a nervous young woman sits on the edge of a bed preparing herself for an operation that will rid her of one unintended consequence of Baghdad's new atmosphere of freedom.

      The austere room belongs to Samira Ali Baddria, a midwife turned backstreet abortionist, one of dozens of medically trained people who now offer an illegal escape from pregnancy to the city's women. The nervous young woman is her latest "patient".

      In Iraq, a Muslim country, abortion has long been illegal - and socially taboo - except in medical emergencies. But since the collapse of Saddam Hussein's rule turned the established order on its head, Baghdad has witnessed an upsurge in promiscuity - and the emergence of a practice too risky to carry out under the former regime, with its network of spies. Abortion has become readily available.

      That was published only five months after we heard "Mission Accomplished."

  •  Thanks Beket, you've (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Beket, Lashe

    laid out the cruelty and perversion of these folks for us all to see.  You also make crystal clear your compassion in providing abortion care and your commitment to truth, honor and justice.  
    The RCC extremists who are so obsessed with sex and death focus on these base common denominators that we all have ; how ugly that they don't use this for truth and beauty!
    It takes no talent or 'gift' to make people feel worse about themselves; rather the talent or 'gift' in helping others feel better is much more valued- too bad the RCC is so negative and punishing.  Look at all the good it could do!  Isn't that what Christ taught and led others to do?  Just what perverted version of 'christianity' are they practicing?
    Thanks for a great diary Beket, and please keep writing.  Women's lives depend on you.

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